Current:Home > MarketsAmazon CEO says company will lay off more than 18,000 workers -Keystone Capital Education
Amazon CEO says company will lay off more than 18,000 workers
View
Date:2025-04-16 04:58:57
Amazon is laying off 18,000 employees, the tech giant said Wednesday, representing the single largest number of jobs cut at a technology company since the industry began aggressively downsizing last year.
In a blog post, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy wrote that the staff reductions were set off by the uncertain economy and the company's rapid hiring over the last several years.
The cuts will primarily hit the company's corporate workforce and will not affect hourly warehouse workers. In November, Amazon had reportedly been planning to lay off around 10,000 employees but on Wednesday, Jassy pegged the number of jobs to be shed by the company to be higher than that, as he put it, "just over 18,000."
Jassy tried to strike an optimistic note in the Wednesday blog post announcing the massive staff reduction, writing: "Amazon has weathered uncertain and difficult economies in the past, and we will continue to do so."
While 18,000 is a large number of jobs, it's just a little more than 1% of the 1.5 million workers Amazon employees in warehouses and corporate offices.
Last year, Amazon was the latest Big Tech company to watch growth slow down from its pandemic-era tear, just as inflation being at a 40-year high crimped sales.
News of Amazon's cuts came the same day business software giant Salesforce announced its own round of layoffs, eliminating 10% of its workforce, or about 8,000 jobs.
Salesforce Co-CEO Mark Benioff attributed the scaling back to a now oft-repeated line in Silicon Valley: The pandemic's boom times made the company hire overzealously. And now that the there has been a pullback in corporate spending, the focus is on cutting costs.
"As our revenue accelerated through the pandemic, we hired too many people leading into this economic downturn we're now facing," Benioff wrote in a note to staff.
Facebook owner Meta, as well as Twitter, Snap and Vimeo, have all announced major staff reductions in recent months, a remarkable reversal for an industry that has experienced gangbusters growth for more than a decade.
For Amazon, the pandemic was an enormous boon to its bottom line, with online sales skyrocketing as people avoided in-store shopping and the need for cloud storage exploded with more businesses and governments moving operations online. And that, in turn, led Amazon to go on a hiring spree, adding hundreds of thousands of jobs over the past several years.
The layoffs at Amazon were first reported on Tuesday by the Wall Street Journal.
CEO Jassy, in his blog post, acknowledged that while the company's hiring went too far, the company intends to help cushion the blow for laid off workers.
"We are working to support those who are affected and are providing packages that include a separation payment, transitional health insurance benefits, and external job placement support," Jassy said.
Amazon supports NPR and pays to distribute some of our content.
veryGood! (66378)
Related
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Michael Blackson Shares His Secret to Long-Lasting Relationship With Fiancée Rada Darling
- James Harden returns to Los Angeles in Clippers' first move of NBA free agency
- Michael J. Fox plays guitar with Coldplay at Glastonbury: 'Our hero forever'
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Martin Mull, beloved actor known for Fernwood 2 Night, Roseanne and Sabrina the Teenage Witch, dies at 80
- Teen shot and killed by police in upstate New York, authorities say
- Knee injury knocks Shilese Jones out of second day of Olympic gymnastics trials
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- Dakota Johnson Joins Chris Martin's Kids Apple and Moses at Coldplay's Glastonbury Set
Ranking
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Pogacar takes the yellow jersey in the 2nd stage of the Tour de France. Only Vingegaard can keep up
- Knee injury knocks Shilese Jones out of second day of Olympic gymnastics trials
- To Save the Amazon, What if We Listened to Those Living Within It?
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- AEW Forbidden Door 2024 live: Results, match grades, highlights and more
- Houston LGBT+ Pride Festival and Parade 2024: Route, date, time and where to watch events
- Gathering of 10,000 hippies in forest shut down as Rainbow Family threatened with jail
Recommendation
Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
Despite indefinite landing delay, NASA insists Boeing Starliner crew not stranded in space
Temporary clerk to be appointed after sudden departures from one Pennsylvania county court
Martin Mull, scene-stealing actor from 'Roseanne', 'Arrested Development', dies at 80
What to watch: O Jolie night
SWAT member who lost lower leg after being run over by fire truck at Nuggets parade stages comeback
Things to know about the case of Missouri prison guards charged with murder in death of a Black man
Martin Mull, scene-stealing actor from 'Roseanne', 'Arrested Development', dies at 80